Nusa Dua and Tanjung
Benoa are Bali's modern tourist resorts - a government-run
dreamland of coconut palms, white sand beaches and pristine
waters located near the island's southernmost tip. Geologically,
the area is quite different from the rest of Bali, and even
from the rest of the Bukit peninsula upon which it rests.
Instead of rice fields
or limestone cliffs, there is sandy soil reaching down to
a long, sandy beach protected by a reef. Coconut trees are
everywhere - Nusa Dua was once a huge coconut plantation.
The climate here is also drier than the rest of Bali, freshened
by a mild ocean breeze.
Genesis of a beach
resort
Once
upon a time, the Balinese giant and master builder Kebo Iwa
decided that the Tanjung Benoa marshes should be transformed
into rice fields, so he went to the Bukit and picked up two
scoops of earth. While shouldering them along the coast, his
pole broke, dropping the earth into the sea. Two islets appeared:
the "Nusa Dua."
The marshes were never
to become rice fields the bay remained a bay with a long cape,
Tanjung Benoa, jutting into it. Nevertheless, Kebo Iwa, who
created the area, is now engaged in a new venture - luxury
hotel development.
Making Nusa Dua into
a tourist paradise was a consciously implemented government
policy, designed with the help of the World Bank. Two main
concepts underlay the project: to develop an up-market tourist
resort, beautiful, secure, easy of access, with the most modern
facilities, while keeping the disruptive impact on the local
environment as low as possible.
Bualu was chosen both
for its scenic location as well as for its relative isolation
from densely populated areas. By 1971, the master plan was
ready Construction began in 1973. The first hotel, the Bualu
Club, was completed in 1979, initially as a training ground
for a Tourism and Hotel School (BPLP). Several luxury hotels
with over 4,000 rooms have opened since then.
The early days
The project did have
its teething pain. Tenants would not leave the land - Balinese
custom distinguishes rights over land from rights over trees!
And the trees have soul Fishermen would not leave the beach.
And then there were all the temples.
These questions were
all eventually settled - tenants got land, fishermen take
tourists sailing for a fee, and the temple festivals continue.
The entrance to the complex
consists of a tall candi bentar split gate. Facing it 200
meters away is a modern-style candi dwara pala pala fountain-gate
surmounted by a monstrous kala head. The outer split gate
separates while the inner gate unites. The cosmic complementarily
of Bali and tourism in a nutshell.
The hotels are landmarks
of the new Balinese architecture. The design committee specified
that buildings be no higher than the coconut trees and that
their layouts be based oil Balinese macro and microcosmic
models. Thus, the Club Med has its head in a Padmasana shrine
to the northeast and its genitals and bowels in the discotheque
(naturally!), with the kitchen to the southwest.
Check
out the accommodations
in this Area
Tanjung Benoa: revamped
port
For centuries, the natural
means of communication between this area and the rest of Bali
was by boat from Tanjung Benoa, as this was easier than the
overland route via Jimbaran. Tanjung Benoa, which appears
isolated at the tip of the peninsula, was in fact a trading
port for Badung and the eastern Bukit, with a world outlook
extending right across the archipelago. Its population bears
traces of this mercantile past. Chinese have lived here for
centuries: a "Ratu Cina" shrine in the local temple
of death bears witness to their long presence.
Although most families
have moved to Denpasar, they still maintain a Klenteng temple
here, where local fishermen now inquire about the secrets
of the stars with a Chinese abbot. The village also has a
Bugis quarter, with a small mosque.
Bualu village
Compared to Tanjung Benoa,
the village of Bualu, where Nusa Dua is situated, was a sleepy
village subsisting on copra, fishing and coral collecting.
There were two noble houses and no brahmans. As elsewhere
in Bali, religion was ever-present.
The area had, and keeps,
very special features. Its best-known ritual is an appeasement
of the sea, to protect the land from any incursion by the
fanged monster lurking beyond the waves - Jero Gede Mecaling
harbinger of death and illness. People present him with offerings
in his many shrines along the coast.
The region around Buala
is also dotted with sea temples, some within the perimeters
of the luxury hotels. And pengelem duck sacrifices to the
sea are offered under the eyes of passing tourists.